View
217
Download
2
Category
Preview:
Citation preview
YES BANK Q2 2013 Earnings Call 23 Oct’12
Operator Ladies and gentlemen, good day and welcome to the YES BANK Conference Call hosted by Morgan Stanley India Company Private Limited. As a reminder for the duration of this conference, all participants lines will be in the listen‐only mode and there will be an opportunity for you to ask questions at the end of today's presentation. Please note that this conference is being recorded. At this time, I would like to hand the conference over to Mr. Anil Agarwal from Morgan Stanley. Thank you and over to you, sir. Thanks a lot, Inba. Good evening everybody. Thanks a lot for joining the conference call to discuss YES BANK's results strategy and outlook.
Gives me great pleasure to welcome the senior management team of the Bank. We have with us Mr. Rana Kapoor, the Founder, Managing Director and CEO, along with him we have Mr. Rajat Monga the Senior Group President, Financial Markets and the CFO, we have with us Mr. Pralay Mondal, who is the Senior Group President, Retail and Business Banking, Mr. Jaideep Iyer Senior President, Financial Management and Mr. Aparajit Bhandarkar Executive VP and Head of Financial and Investor Strategy team.
What we will do is Mr. Kapoor will basically give opening remarks and then Rajat will discuss the results and then we'll open it up for Q&A. Thanks a lot Mr. Kapoor.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Yeah, Anil. Thanks very much. Thanks to Morgan Stanley for hosting this investor interaction. Ladies and gentlemen I am pleased to share with you along with our top management team, the results of YES BANK's second quarter performance. As you would have noted we've had a fairly satisfactory quarter against the backdrop of heightened risk conditions with a increase in PAT of 30.2%, with PAT at a level of 306.1 crores compared to 235 crores in the corresponding period.
Our net interest income in this quarter increased to 524 crores representing an overall increase of 35.9%, this is a very good sign and also augurs well for the future quarters with a steady reduction in cost of funds and overall spreads also improving somewhat, NIMs improving to 2.9% in this particular quarter.
Non‐interest income went up by 29.3% to approximately 277 crores and the overall net income increased by 33.6%. The operating profit this quarter was at a level of 484.7 crores representing an increase of 25.6%, non‐interest income was fairly steady at around 34.6% quite consistent with prior quarters as well.
The cost to income of the Bank continues to be fairly efficient at on overall level of 39.5%. So still well below 40% overall. The yield on advances steady at 12.4 and as I mentioned to you that there has been fairly perceptible reduction in cost of funds now at a level of 8.7%. The ROA of the Bank was at 1.5% and RoE fairly stable again at 23.8%.
As you know that the last four years now so for the last 16 quarters, YES Bank's ROA has been around 1.5% or better. And RoEs have been in excess of 20% now for almost 16 quarters four years in a row. The overall half yearly results demonstrated an overall increase in PAT of 32.2% just a shade short of 600 crores at 596.2. So we are keeping a fairly good run‐rate to get to what I believe will be a much better second half as is natural in our profession, in our business.
So moving on the loan growth was at a level of 22.9% with total advances in excess of 42,000 crores. Including credit substitutes the overall growth over the corresponding period was 32.5% at a level of around 54,000 crores of total loans and credit substitutes.
Deposits increased by 18.6% and have 52,000 crores. CASA was slightly more than 9,000 crores at our highest level with a growth of 86.7% compared to last year and with the CASA ratio improving further to a level of 17.3% with SA increasing by over the corresponding period last year. I also wanted to mention that CASA as you may recall September 2011 was at a aggregate level of 11%. So, from 11% in one year's time it is improved to 17.3%. And so we are very much in track to getting to a 30% CASA in consonance with our Version 2 strategy by 2015.
The balance sheet of the Bank stands at approximately 83,000 crores representing an overall increase of 32%, 32.2% compared to the same period last year. Asset quality has been able to remain fairly intact in fact sequentially gross NPA has improved to 0.24%
compared to 0.28% as of June 30, 2012 and net NPA was at a level of just around 5 basis point 0.05 compared to 0.08% as of June 30, 2012. In this quarter we've raised 800 crores in the September quarter we raised 800 crores of upper Tier II which was 200 crores and 600 crores of lower Tier 2 which came the lower Tier II entirely came from LIC and we're hopeful of raising another 400 odd crores in the current October to December quarter as well to ensure that we are fully capitalized and take full advantage of the remaining window for hybrid capital raising. Consequently, the capital adequacy of the Bank was at a fairly healthy level of 17.5% with core Tier I at a level of 9.5%.
The book value of the share is just a shade short of Rs. 150 at Rs. 149.2. So fairly steady and this is without any capital raised now for the last two and a half years. Head count of the Bank has crossed 6,300, we have added about 1,537 people in the last one year and as you can see the number branches have touched 400, with the number of ATMs now touching 694 as of September 30th, which is an increase of almost 414 ATMs which have been added since last year. There's more than that, 414 have been added since last year, so basically a lot of investments in the retail infrastructure, in branches, in ATMs and considerable deployment of additional sales staff in generation of liabilities, in service and branch operations.
Just moving on, overall as I'm sure you would have observed, we have achieved fairly granular non‐interest income with transaction banking as in trade and cash management contributing about 29% of the total non‐interest income, treasury was just about 17% in this particular quarter, advisory businesses across corporate finance, i‐banking and the corporate banking was the single largest contributor and fairly steady at a level of around 43.2% and the good news is that we are seeing a steady improvement in the retail fee contribution which stood at 11% as of September, for the quarter September 2012.
Other couple of points relating to liabilities I wanted to highlight that CASA plus retail liabilities is now at a level of around 36% plus, which about a year ago was about a year ago was about 28.6%. So in a year's time, the retail contribution of liabilities has improved by approximately 8% in less than a year, and we will see this trend continue with retail heading towards contributing about 60% of our liabilities by getting to a 30% CASA and 30% coming from retail FDs by 2015.
There have been quite a few other highlights, but just a little bit of comments on our overall advances portfolio, we continue to be fairly diversified with no single sector contributing more than 10% of our total exposure.
Corporate banking as of end of September was about 67.4% of our total exposure. Commercial banking, which is mid‐corporate stood at a level of around approximately 18% and retail including micro SMEs was just short of 15%, at 14.7%.
So this in a nutshell is our financial summary. Any other points Rajat? I think some additional comments from Rajat, Jaideep, Pralay.
Corporate Participant So I think we can answer as part of taking questions. Can I request the moderator to start the Q&A please.
Questions And Answers
Operator Sure sir. Thank you very much. Ladies and gentlemen, we will now begin the question‐and‐answer session. [Operator Instructions]. Our first question is from Nikhil Poddar of Barclays. Please go ahead. Hello.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Yes, Nikhil go ahead please.
Nikhil Poddar Yeah, congratulations on a good set of numbers sir. Sir I had one question why do YES BANK want to exit the CDR process in context of Bank's lower credit cost?
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Basically we have been deliberating on the CR participation and seeing the pros and cons I think along with risk management we came to the conclusion that instead of being a small medium player and being compared to get into CDR situations we've realized that over a period of time it is better to get into bilateral problem solving rather than in a larger format where the bigger banks get more or less their terms through in the CDR because of sure volume and voting capacity. So, I think our independence as a mid size bank in bilateral restructurings and negotiations we believe we'll be far more effective and I think it's something that we believe will work in our favor.
Nikhil Poddar Okay sir. Thank you.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Thank you.
Operator Thank you very much. Our next question is from Manish Oswal of K.R. Choksey Share and Stocks. Please go ahead.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Hello?
Operator Mr. Manish Oswal your line has been un‐muted. Please go ahead.
Manish Ostwal Yeah. First question on your saving bank deposit sir. Deposit mobilization continue to be strong during this quarter. Could you through some light on the key driver for such strong sequential growth, because some of the mid size private
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer No actually if you see our deposit growth for bank of our size to year‐on‐year has been at a level of 18.6% in terms of the totality of the deposit growth, but within the composition of the deposits as we have been saying in our various investor interactions the highest emphasis within the bank is on improving granular CASA and granular FD's.
On both fronts as you would have observed we've had fairly significant progress, CASA has improved to our overall level of 17.3 and we have fair amount of visibility that if the current momentum sustains we should cross the magic number of 20 by end of fiscal year '13 and most definitely then inspire to get to 30% CASA but 2015 which has been our uncompromising target since the beginning of Version 2.
The best part is that the growth is happening in SA, SA growth year‐on‐year has been about 351% to be very precised and it's coming due to accelerating momentum on our corporate employee accounts program so our B2B to C strategy in acquisition of salary accounts is garnering momentum and that is a very important development within our bank because SA allows us significant cross‐selling and mining ability too it is a switch over to some extent from high cost FDs because our FD cost is slightly more than 9%, and over a period of time we will see FD costs coming down and moving and volumes coming down as well and moving into savings account. As you are also aware that savings account allow us to also work towards a higher share of the wallet through third party product distribution over a period of time as we build more client vintage, we should be able to also sell consumer asset products car loans, housing loans and we are making rapid forays in consumer lending in terms of new product introductions.
So a savings account has a lot more depth and lot more opportunity than FD account which is far higher priced. So definitely SA is taking poll position in the Bank, followed by CA. CA is coming to a large extent from our cash management solution across our small, medium, large corporate businesses, through our ERP connectivity with a lot of our corporate clients, and the good thing is that today savings accounts have become really an origination product because the employee value proposition for employers to offer
6% and 7% SA rates is very compelling for them to review their empanelment's of banks who are offering traditional rates at 4% and actually invigorate their HR departments to empanel YES BANK and to offer this combo of 7% and 6% to employees at various income points.
So the point here is that SA is also a driver for CA in a way. And therefore we have far greater confidence that with concerted focused efforts CASA will continue to rise. Needless to say, there is also a fair amount of emphasis in terms of retail deposit acquisition. And that number CASA and retail now stands at 36.6%, the hardwire target to get this number up to minimum 55, on a very good day to 60% by March 2015.
So fairly long comment but this is the number one objective of the Bank is to build a very stable reservoir of very granular, diversified liabilities including diversification in geography across the country. And with 400 branches, short of new branches opening in Nagaland and Manipur and Lakshadweep and Andaman, we are present in all parts of the country now.
Manish Ostwal Secondly sir when we compare 30% CASA by 2015 and the retail book of 30%. How do you see the fee opportunity through retail banking in the overall totality of YES BANK?
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Very critical question. As I conveyed some data points, as you know retail fees as a percentage of the total non‐interest income was at a level of 11%, so 11% was the retail contribution. Right.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Now it is our ‐‐ I would say a mission critical objective to make retail fees the number one contributor as you see in HDFC Bank and probably in one or two other banks, this 11% number is a number that we would want to take minimum to about a level of 25% by 2015 and as and when we get into version 3.0, this will definitely become the single biggest number anywhere between 40% to 45% in the longer horizon but our medium term target is to take this number to at least 25% of total non‐interest income and there is a lot of stretch potential and there is a lot of cross‐sell untapped potential in some of our newly acquired SA accounts because the first think is to stabilize them in the Bank, give them a good service proposition and then deep dive into these accounts, get the CRMs in place and start cross‐selling and we are at a very early stage because now we are opening almost 40,000 to 45,000 accounts a month, savings accounts a month.
Manish Ostwal And lastly on 400, out of 400 branches, how many branches we are currently offering retail loan products?
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Sorry?
Manish Ostwal Out of the 400 branches that we are having, how many branches we're offering retail loan products?
Corporate Participant Pralay, I'll request to Pralay to give you a specific answer on this.
Pralay Mondal, Senior Group President, Retail and Business Banking Hi Pralay here, I look after the retail part of the...
Manish Ostwal Hello?
Operator Participants there seems to be a disconnection from the management line. Please hold on while we join them back. We request you not to disconnect your lines.
Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for being connected. We have that management line now connected. Please go ahead. Mr. Ostwal, you may go ahead sir.
Pralay Mondal, Senior Group President, Retail and Business Banking Yeah, this is Pralay Mondal here, I look after the retail part of the business and SME. Coming to the question on retail assets being offered from the branches, the objective is to offer from most of the branches as we go along because our focus is to be customer centric and as Rana was talking about it, that we want to have the largest share of wallet.
Having said that, we will build into the geographies and the different branches as we launch these products in each of these branches. Right now, the way we're looking at it is, every customer who has a requirement we have that product on the shelf, and we'll offer this on a relationship basis to the customer and as and when our portfolio becomes larger then we will look at enhancing the portfolio size.
So, the clear answer to that is, we are offering to most of our customers on a relationship basis, mostly into the top 100, 150 geographies. But beyond that we will do it based on the customer requirements.
Manish Ostwal Okay. And lastly data point, what is the A sale book size and the duration of the book?
Corporate Participant Sir which book size?
Manish Ostwal A sale, available for sale book size?
Corporate Participant The book size of available to sale in terms of Rs. crores?
Pralay Mondal, Senior Group President, Retail and Business Banking Yes sir.
Corporate Participant That should be about 10,000 crores or 11,000 crores.
Manish Ostwal And sir what would be the modify duration?
Corporate Participant
Between two and three years. Thank you so much and all the best sir.
Corporate Participant Thank you.
Operator Thank you very much. Our next question is from Rajatdeep Anand of ICICI Prudential. Please go ahead.
Rajatdeep Anand Yeah, hi good evening, can you hear me.
Corporate Participant Yes we can hear you.
Rajatdeep Anand Yeah hi, I had a few questions. I think the diversification on liabilities is going on quite well. I would like to understand if you have similar plans for assets because right now I think the concentration of corporate loans has only increased in your loan book, over the last few quarters, so that's one question.
Secondly, I think after many quarters investments have lagged advances growth, so is it, will the investment growth from here look similar to advances and deposit growth? That is second question.
And thirdly, as you scale up to be bigger bank, I was just trying to understand if only 30 bps of credit costs are sustainable because other bigger banks in the country, even the private ones, have much higher credit cost or they tend to provide for much more at least that way.
So I was just trying to understand if these credit cost is something that is sustainable.
Corporate Participant I answer the first question first on the retail assets question. Retail assets, the growth once we build a basic platform and it's a question of customer acquisition. It is not difficult to build the scale there. The critical part of any retail assets business is to build up the right quality of the book, the right customer acquisition and the granular, the granularity of the book is very important.
Secondly, based on our experience we have seen that cross‐selling to internal customers with support of course from CIBIL and other credit bureau et cetera, it is a much better proposition than going through the channel, to the DS' and going to open market and picking up customers.
So clearly the strategy is to first build up the granular liability book and then cross‐sell and build the largest share of wallet to the customers. So I am just trying to understand, when you are saying granular and granularity, you mean all different kinds of retail loans, that is what do you mean by?
Corporate Participant Thing is, we have almost already on the shelf all the products with us already, expect for credit cards and to some extent home loans, we have all the other products now launched including gold loans also we have launched last...
Rajatdeep Anand
So of all 400 of your branches, these products are available for customers to walk in and...?
Corporate Participant This what I answered before that most relevant branches we have it right now because one needs to create a infrastructure to support a retail assets products in the branches. So depending on the customer requirements and the size of the branch and customer relevance in those branches, we are launching these products.
Having said that, I think as we move into deeper geography and the smaller branches, the kind of customers on the retail asset side will be quite different to the auto loans and this thing, there will be more two wheelers there, there could be more on the smaller SME side and things like that. So it will vary from product, branches to branches and geography to geography. But simple strategy is that, get the customers through the door, through the liability, seasoned that customer well, ensure that we understand the life cycle of the customer and cross‐sell more products. That's exactly, so initially, we will grow slowly or surely with the good quality of the portfolio. And as we grow, then scaling it up is extremely in retail assets once we have the right platform.
Rajatdeep Anand So what kind of timelines should we be looking at on this especially on the retail assets piece?
Corporate Participant It's extremely difficult to give a timeline but let me put it in the perspective that you have seen where the large franchise has grown.
Rajatdeep Anand Right.
Corporate Participant And typically within six months to 12 months of a sizzling of a customer on the liability side, best on his meet because this guy also will have a auto loan, it will have something else et cetera. We are putting lot of systems upfront whether it is our own in‐house build serum or the lead management systems and those kinds of stuffs. So as and when we understood the customer, and as and when we can offer the customer relationship best pricing based on his But based on my experience, I have seen that typically through the door if it comes six to 12 months is where the cross‐selling starts and as and when it grows the multiple products that are cross‐sold. So, to that extent I will say that it's a function of the size of the base and the vintage of the customer with the bank.
Rajatdeep Anand No. Yeah, sorry, I'm just persisting on this point because I think savings got deregulated in Q3. So, and at that time branch banking in terms of your reported advances split was 15% and now it is 14 something. So I was just trying to understand if probably retail assets is going to take more time than the six months that we were thinking initially, so that is why?
Corporate Participant Rajat, sorry, the retail share of that 15% was actually below 1%.
Rajatdeep Anand Okay.
Corporate Participant But...
Rajatdeep Anand Okay. It is SME and retail, yes.
Corporate Participant SME and retail, right. And most of our pool positions that we have, that we acquire from other originators which are largely granular retail type or SME type positions are also in the same number.
Rajatdeep Anand Okay. Okay, I understand now.
Corporate Participant So there is for the organic part of, let's say retail assets is growing.
Rajatdeep Anand Okay. But it is not showing up in the overall number because what is also happening is which was part of the, let's say the first question you're asking is that the share of corporate book is growing.
Rajatdeep Anand Yes.
Corporate Participant That's also because we are not in a acceleration mode in retail. We are in a build‐out mode.
Rajatdeep Anand Understood.
Corporate Participant Not a scale of mode, it is still establishment mode.
Rajatdeep Anand It's a pilot kind of a thing.
Corporate Participant More than a pilot.
Rajatdeep Anand Okay.
Corporate Participant
But it is not, see we want to establish many of our retail lending products in our retail liability customer base.
Rajatdeep Anand Understood.
Corporate Participant We don't want to just begin to expect walk‐ins out of 400 branches now. We want to target sell, mine the CRM to establish the credit processes, the build tests and all of that, so it is, I would state more than a pilot but not yet ready to {A:Rajatdeep Anand:} Okay. Understood.
Corporate Participant But also happening like it happens in many other parts of the cycle is that the share of corporate book grows when the risk is little bit challenged. Because whatever business we do in this environment we obviously find more comfort either in mortgages or in known corporate lending. So we are not that aggressive in mortgages but therefore our share of corporate book is to that extent responding to the current environment. You will notice that happened in 2009 as well.
Rajatdeep Anand Okay.
Corporate Participant In the growth phase, the diversification is, there is no fly to quality as such. There is actually a little bit more balance of risk. But now there is a little bit of element of, I mean one is happier with the known understood corporate exposure than in this environment, go try too hard with commercial vehicles or construction equipment et cetera.
Rajatdeep Anand Understood.
Corporate Participant So, we are taking that into a strategy in terms of what is possibly a reflection of the risk environment more than a growth environment.
Rajatdeep Anand Okay.
Corporate Participant On the split between investments and loans, I think there would be, I would say element of let's say deal driven outcomes in investment book unlike the loan book. The loan book is not, let's say this quarter was better but may not sustain. We don't want to leave a message here that this loan book growth is can be extrapolated not really I think we still remain cautious there is at least two quarters of caution that we have to observe because on the ground risks are not yet mitigated. Yes the policy the government's peak an action is lot better but it will take its time for it to derisk on the ground situation.
So investment book will have its role to play what also happens is that off late the distribution opportunity has been also quite brisk so we've have also moving out of our let's say investments that we had sourced in the earlier months. So the churn is quite heavy in the investment book as we speak. Investment book remains opportunity and deal based distribution sensitive so there is a growing propensity of corporates to look at
corporate bonds as a issuance mode because the GAAP between base rates and corporate bond yields is widening. So there will be more and more corporates who will want to refinance loans through bond roots and that's happening we have seen many large names hit the markets in the last three months to four months.
So there is reasonable momentum and more will come in course of time. I think the last part of your question was on trade cost sustainability of credit cost I think it relates to risk. So if we're going to take do more risky business we're going to get more credit cost, in fact you will see there are plenty of banks in the Indian space itself where they have 14% to 15% yielding portfolios but have even lower credit costs. So, I am not too sure if...
Rajatdeep Anand Okay. No I'll ask that question a bit differently. So, there are many corporates which are standard assets.
Pralay Mondal, Senior Group President, Retail and Business Banking Yes.
Rajatdeep Anand Yet with the kind of revenues and EBITDA we have, it seems very difficult that we'll be able to make the interest payments. So, and these are large corporates mostly. And so I was just trying to understand and many banks have exposures to different of these large corporates. So I was just trying to understand that any slippage or any provisioning which might come might be lumpy.
So I was just trying to understand if 30 bps over the cycle is a reasonably good number because other banks much higher. Even if you look at other corporate banks, they have much higher credit costs. So I was just wondering about you...
Pralay Mondal, Senior Group President, Retail and Business Banking See it cannot be let's say that those banks are getting credit cost and we are not and that we have the same exposure. So, either we got better exposure relatively speaking.
Rajatdeep Anand Right.
Pralay Mondal, Senior Group President, Retail and Business Banking Or that there is more to what other banks are also disclosing. So, it's very difficult to, because the disclosure are reasonably imperfect. Now I can take this care which possibly we will anywhere discuss on, for example there is a current situation with one medium size account, which is... Media account you are talking about.
Pralay Mondal, Senior Group President, Retail and Business Banking Yeah media account yes. I can promise you we are the only account ‐‐ only bank which has show recovery.
Rajatdeep Anand Okay.
Pralay Mondal, Senior Group President, Retail and Business Banking On this account.
Rajatdeep Anand Okay.
Pralay Mondal, Senior Group President, Retail and Business Banking Which means that there is something different about us either or whatever, I mean we risk manage better. Yes, we have situations. May be resolve them better, may be restructure them better to begin with. So, why do we have very high degree of exclusive collateral ‐‐ to us in this particular account. And other bank don't even, cannot even show many of them cannot even show NOCs from the lead bank to the charges that they are claiming that they have from this particular account. So there will be differences in...
Rajatdeep Anand I think you also talked about some wind energy company I saw that on Bloomberg so I was just asking, so I was just...
Pralay Mondal, Senior Group President, Retail and Business Banking Yes. So wind energy company is again function of structure. We have a self liquidating structure we are not lending as such. We are actually in situations where some of them are self liquidating. So we have performance risk related exposure there in that company. And it's not a large exposure.
Rajatdeep Anand Okay.
Pralay Mondal, Senior Group President, Retail and Business Banking We are not we possibly are the bottom quartile in terms of size of lenders in that company, if you can call that lending. Okay. Okay, I understand.
Pralay Mondal, Senior Group President, Retail and Business Banking So it is not I am sure we'll have situations, I am not saying...
Rajatdeep Anand I was just wondering if you do some internal stress test and all then what is the kind of credit cost that you people look at? What is the base case and what is the bear case? I was just trying to understand that.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Our best case is zero.
Rajatdeep Anand Okay.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer I think over the last cycle which was let's say, our experience over the 2009‐2010 period. I think the worst we got in one quarter was 70‐80 basis points of annualized credit cost.
Rajatdeep Anand Credit cost, this is we are talking on loans.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer On loans, yes.
Rajatdeep Anand Okay.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer This is like loans‐to‐loans. There is no like‐for‐like.
Rajatdeep Anand Right. This is not being deflated by customer assets denominator. This is like‐for‐like. So that is our experience from zero to 80, let's say 1%.
Rajatdeep Anand Understood.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer I can put that. Because see as long as we do not have a risk management situation in our top 30‐40 exposure as long as that. So as long as we and many banks will have similar I would say outcomes as well. Will get little below average credit costs.
Rajatdeep Anand Okay.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Because that is the averaging, if at all you get one knock which is coming from your larger accounts, if they don't, there is no knock, then you will possibly remain and if you can choose those 30 customers well and so it's not like choosing many thousand customers well, you will not have, you should not see any dramatics on the credit quality, it should be within the absorption that we are holding for the ‐‐ on the credit cost line that other banks are holding in their respective credit cost lines.
Rajatdeep Anand And investments book is restricted to top of the quality even in your loan book or like I'm just trying to understand because it's a lot of ...?
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Lots of things in investment book actually are where we can never lend because those guys borrow below our base rates also.
Rajatdeep Anand
Okay.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer So those guys will invariably issue a CP or a corporate bond. Okay.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer But, so the lending is not necessarily a substitute product sometimes in those situations, but it is very safe to say that the investment book is predominantly of that nature which that it is where pretty much loan is not necessarily a very easy substitute, these companies have ready access to capital markets and you would have already noticed some of the bond deals that we have handled, so it is the last three quarters, four quarters we have done work with Hindalco, with Tata Steel, with Tata Power for example, I don't think we can lend to these companies.
Rajatdeep Anand Okay.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer We can, it's not that lending is not possible but why would Hindalco take money at 10.5%, when they can place a bond at 9% today.
Rajatdeep Anand Okay.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer So it's actually that trade off, so it is a wrong statement to make but yes our investment books, credit quality will be better than our loan book credit quality in that respect, so that doesn't mean that loan book is bad but that the investment book is better.
Rajatdeep Anand I understand, right. So those were my questions, thanks for answering.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Thank you, Rajatdeep. Thank you.
Operator Thank you very much. Our next question is from Suruchi Chaudhary of Edelweiss. Please go ahead.
Nilesh Parikh Hi, Rajat. Nilesh here, just on the ‐‐ just coming back to the investment book now as a percentage of the overall balance sheet this has grown over the last couple of years and so we build that book up, now just wanted to understand the strategy going forward, when do we start offloading or when does advances actually become meaningful part going forward and just on the investment side, what is the kind of gains because now yields on that book has dropped and with the kind of duration that we are running, what is the kind of mark‐to‐market that we're sitting on, if any?
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer
Well, I think the book will have a little bit of a, I would say like I was possibly explaining in an answer to the earlier question as well, there would be an element of, I would say, interest rate structure that will dictate some of these outcomes which we are experiencing as an opportunity in the market.
And then it is up to us, as YES BANK or other banks to respond to that opportunity and convert that into business. So we run this, the investment part or corporate bond and commercial paper part is being run in the Bank as a business. So as long as we have that balance of risk and return, we will continue to be working through this, I would say, investment book.
There would be comfort periods of the cycle, there would be discomfort periods of the cycle. In 2008 late we would have been scared because of liquidity risks that were prevalent at that point in time, today we have to take views on the basis of credit risk thankfully it is a more like a classical cycle that we are experiencing. So we can have outcomes being expected and our business strategy commensurate to that outcome that we are expecting. So as rates come down yes naturally we should make money on this portfolio, but that's not the design behind this. The design behind this is distribution. We have found a continuous churn in this book. We are not waiting for rates to come down but we are taking comfort from the fact that rates will come down.
Nilesh Parikh Okay
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer So we are not running this book to like a trading book. This is a distribution book. So which means that we will have timeliness by this we will have to rotate out our exposures. It cannot be something that we are just going to keep piling on.
It will throughput based, there will be times where inputs is more then output. So the book will grow. And visa versa when the book will shed as well. So it is my humble summation would be not to budget some trading gain element out of this, if that happens it will be not the design, it will be a concurrent outcome, to the part of the cycle.
And once we reach a little bit on the lower end on the interest rate cycle we will be worried about piling on to the book, because that means sure shot losses as well. So the distribution part will become that bit less than comforted by the fact that interest rates can yet go down in the fallen environment we will worried about interest rates going up. So we will be very hot on distribution at that point in time. But yet we have to do the business.
Nilesh Parikh Yeah, but you know on logically now with rates coming off spreads on this business pure interest spreads would be lower, right? Or at best flattish and probably you can naturally garner more from the loan book because the rates on the loan side will take some time before they come off? Absolutely today on a carry basis loan book is lot more attractive, but on risk adjusted basis I don't think we can simply just say that okay we want to grow loans absolutely credits periods have come to I would say a low at least a two three year low I don't think we have seen the current today's credits spreads for the higher rated corporates being as low as what they are currently.
Yes there has been I would say that correction that has happened in the market. So today if you ask me I would rather if I'm trader I would rather buy g‐secs then buy corporate bonds. Because the spread is so narrow, if RBI is going to cut rates possibly the spread will widen because the g‐secs will value more if I'm a trader but if I'm running this size of business I have to take both the views.
Nilesh Parikh Okay.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer I have to look at the credit spread curves, I have to look at the underlying government bond curve, I have to look at the distribution opportunity. So it is not that's why I am saying this is not a trading call that we take, it is a distribution call that we will take.
Nilesh Parikh
Sure.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer And it does comfort us that even if we have to take three months to distribute the interest rate environment in likely to be flat or lower. So that helps even if the interest rates go up a bit we know they are not going to be stable at higher levels they will ultimately come down. So that benefit is there so our the kind of confidence with which we do this business today is not the confidence we will be able to express when the interest rates are lower, but at that time lending will become more attractive.
Nilesh Parikh Okay.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Because that time when rates are fallen economy possibly and are beginning to look up is possibly when economy is looking better then lending will look viable all over again, not viable really but more attractive relatively speaking. So there will be inter say cycles and inter change nothing is permanent.
Nilesh Parikh Pralay Mondal, Senior Group President, Retail and Business Banking I think couple of reasons, may be one is that we are hiding the second decimal. So, may be the second decimal would have been better. So, that is one. The other is that we have been a little bit excess SLR heavy. So we've been, basically been financing let say some excess SLR position of ‐‐ bills may be which we can buy at between 8.25, 8.35 and repo that at 8. So, that burden on margins which gets benefited from spreads it gets hot from one is the corporate bond book, the other is the excess SLR.
Nilesh Parikh But this is, you don't disclose the number on the investment yields but if I just do a calculated one, there seems to be a 20 bps uptick in that on a quarter‐on‐quarter basis, and this is with you total investments including the SLR part also. So, when your investment yields have moved up, your loans spreads have also actually moved up by about 30 bps and margin improvement is being restricted to 10 bps. This is something that I couldn't kind of...
Corporate Participant We will, I will get back to you because I don't see why investment yields would have gone up.
Nilesh Parikh Okay.
Corporate Participant Because the recent yields have been flat in this quarter. But they have been flat at a lower level in the recent history. So we have seen the tenure bonds stay between 810 and 820.
Nilesh Parikh Right.
Corporate Participant So whatever we have bought in this quarter must have been at that yields. But historically yields have been higher. So our addition
to investments would have been at lower yields. We also bought our Hindalco paper towards the end of the first quarter which was at a coupon of 955 for example. So I don't think investment yields have gone higher intuitively speaking.
Nilesh Parikh Corporate Participant Yes, Tata Power was bought in towards the middle of the first quarter.
Nilesh Parikh Okay. So the impact may be would have...
Corporate Participant Impact would not have been the plus, it's not a game changer in the sense that it is significant but it can influence one, two basis points.
Nilesh Parikh Sure. No issues. We will take it offline on this.
Corporate Participant Right.
Nilesh Parikh Thanks a lot. Thanks.
Operator Thank you very much. Our next question is from Anand Vasudevan of Franklin Templeton. Please go ahead.
Anand Vasudevan Hi. Good evening. I was able to log in only a little late. So I might be repeating something that you've already discussed but I heard you say that the top 30 to 40 exposures you are not in a risk management situation, is that correct?
Corporate Participant Yes, I was answering a question on expected credit costs and why credit costs can be at 30 basis points or that base should be higher in the, on an average or in the medium term when some other banks end up showing higher cost. So, what I was saying is that as long as the top 30 exposures are intact, I don't think we will average.
Anand Vasudevan Okay. So, what's the size of the largest account that is under‐stress or under‐watch? It will be, I would say, see under‐watch, every account in under‐watch, under‐stress what I will try and answer.
Anand Vasudevan Yeah, that you are concerned about.
Corporate Participant An element of stress would be for example where we have either some chronic delinquency or we have restructuring let's say potential or we have any such similar let's say in one company is well known now that there is an eminent situation in that company. So, I think critically this will be double‐digit basis points of the loan book. So, none of the top 30 accounts are in this list.
Anand Vasudevan Okay. And on Deccan Chronicle, since that name is very much in the public domain now.
Corporate Participant Right.
Anand Vasudevan Have you taken any charges, have you made any provisions against that account?
Corporate Participant Yes. So, we have more or less I would say provided for all the, and more than all the unparalleled exposure we have there.
Anand Vasudevan Okay.
Corporate Participant So, we have, in fact and very quickly summarize that, we have recovered one‐third. We have provided one‐third.
Anand Vasudevan Okay. And what's the total size of the exposure?
Corporate Participant Anand Vasudevan Okay.
Corporate Participant And there is, we still expect collateral realization in this account going forward.
Anand Vasudevan Right. The other question is data point, your credit substitutes in Q1, you've seen a pretty significant jump, and I think at that time Rs. 108 billion.
Corporate Participant Right.
Anand Vasudevan
At that time you said you are warehousing some bonds selling down.
Corporate Participant Yeah.
Anand Vasudevan So has that happened and what's the credit substitute balance as of now?
Corporate Participant Credit substitute balance, and the other number, what were the current number and last quarter number?
Corporate Participant 12,000 and last quarter it was about 11,000.
Corporate Participant Okay it's slightly higher about 4%, 5%, 7% higher than last quarter. Okay.
Corporate Participant But the churn has been ongoing.
Anand Vasudevan Okay.
Corporate Participant We had two let's say known names and deals that we had done in Q1 which was Tata Steel and Hindalco for example. I think there has been continuous churn in these positions.
Anand Vasudevan Okay. And what explains the 23% year‐on‐year growth and 9% sequential growth in advances. Last time we spoke I think you had mentioned that you are pretty cautious about loan growth during the year.
Corporate Participant Right. I think, we are still maintaining that and therefore we are strongly recommending that we do not extrapolate this particular number, which is that this has been an opportunistic outcome, may not repeat. We continue to be cautious on the loan growth front because we want to see the ‐‐ on the ground de‐risking take place to particularly with balance sheets which have, which are currently bearing more stress and possibly also pose systematic risk on the lending front.
So some of these balance sheets need to be de‐risked is when we can begin to believe that the lending environment is beginning to look up. So this quarter has been relatively, I would say, influenced by more refinancing opportunities that have come about because of the interest rate structure that has been moving and expectations on top of that there have been changing.
So no real trend that we want to leave a message behind, this is very likely we may actually have a have lower loan book in December on a sequential basis.
Anand Vasudevan So was this some short‐term, short maturity funding that you have done?
Corporate Participant There would be all types of funding, but yes there is a little bit of a short influence as well.
Anand Vasudevan Corporate Participant Welcome Anand.
Operator Thank you very much. Our next question is from Pranav Tendulkar of Canara Robeco Asset Management. Please go ahead.
Analyst Hi, congrats on the good set of numbers. I had just one query, on the corporate book what is the split like in between term loans and working capital loans, if you can provide that. Thanks a lot.
Corporate Participant Yeah, working capital loans on one side and term loans which will include short‐term loans on the other side will be 40‐60.
Analyst So working capital will be 40.
Corporate Participant Yes.
Analyst Okay, thanks a lot. Thanks.
Corporate Participant Welcome.
Operator Thank you. Our next question is from Ramnath V of Birla Sun Life Insurance. Please go ahead.
Ramnath Venkateswaran Hi, good evening Rajat, just wanted to ask you this question on the CASA ratio. The CASA ratio has definitely shown an improvement. But if I look at CASA as a percentage of overall assets, right. It's remained fairly static over the last It's around, hovering around 10% to 11%. So is this more to do with the fact that you are opportunity using the market to given the interest rate environment to use borrowings to fund the balance sheet? And do you have any particular numbers in terms of trying to push this CASA as a proportion of overall balance sheet in the ‐‐ as you have for the version 2.0 for the CASA ratio and stuff like that.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer I don't think there is, I am not very clear because CASA has grown by about 80% and balance sheet has grown by about 30%.
Ramnath Venkateswaran Yeah, I am saying that over the last, if I look at the numbers right, the CASA as a proportion of overall assets. It was around 9% on the third quarter of FY12.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Right.
Ramnath Venkateswaran Now it's around 10.9%. So what I am just trying to highlight, understand is that, is this movement in terms of using, because your borrowings have gone up, may be you are using the interest rate scenario to kind of improve the yield and stuff like that, that is fairly well understood.
So I am just trying to understand any particular number that you have for this as a proportion of the overall asset size and stuff like that?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Not really. I don't think there the target is particularly to chase the asset share. I think we will take as much CASA as we can.
Ramnath Venkateswaran Sure.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer At some level. Because there is no better book which is 100% CASA funded.
Ramnath Venkateswaran Yeah. In the current context. So the idea of CASA is to maximize without creating a inordinate operational or service burden. We also have to synchronize that with the ability, I mean it is not about just getting a balance but also being able to service the customer along with that.
So not really, we don't target any CASA to assets number like I said, our idea is to maximize.
Ramnath Venkateswaran Sure.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer We're only disclosing numbers which the market conventionally would like to see I mean there will be players who are looking at the same as well.
Ramnath Venkateswaran
Yeah, yeah.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer I mean it could be proportional, relational.
Ramnath Venkateswaran Sure, sure.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer So the bottom‐line is CASA is little short or double.
Ramnath Venkateswaran Sure, fair enough. And the other question is in terms of the average savings deposit balances how have they moved over the last two, three quarters any material difference that you're seeing.
Dr. Rana Kapoor, Founder, Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer Not really the average balances will be somewhere in the range of 55,000 to 65,000.
Ramnath Venkateswaran Okay, fair enough. Thanks. Thanks, Ramnath.
Operator Thank you very much. Our next question is from Rishabh Zaveri of MK Global. Please go ahead.
Kashyap Jhaveri Yeah, hi Rajat congratulations on good set of numbers.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Thank you.
Kashyap Jhaveri Just couple of initially book keeping questions, if we were to have audited accounts for first half what would be our Trier I ratio in that case?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Audited.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer These are audited numbers. Hello?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Yes these are audited numbers.
Kashyap Jhaveri And what is the ‐‐ Tier I out of this 9.5% that we have?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer What is ‐‐ Tier I sorry, what does that mean?
Kashyap Jhaveri So anything which is not good Tier I? There is also I mean we look at it maybe a little differently, there will be some capital which is not equity capital.
Kashyap Jhaveri Right.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer But there will be some assets which are also disposable assets.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Which are taking up capital.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer So if you allow a little bit of therefore core capital it is similar.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer I hope you are getting my point? While there is a quasi capital like you are saying in the Tier I.
Kashyap Jhaveri Right.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer There is also quasi risk. Right.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer That is currently taking up capital. So if we shed the quasi risk and we shed the quasi capital we are going to be back to almost a same number.
Kashyap Jhaveri So, if I am understanding clearly, in case any part of our Tier I capital is not allowable under Basel III probably will shed off those assets also, is it?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Depends because we can firstly internally accrue more capital.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer We can raise more capital.
Kashyap Jhaveri Right.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer There is also Tier I and Tier II capital available under Basel III.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer The current capital will also get grandfathered.
Kashyap Jhaveri Right. So, we are talking about a five year plan.
Kashyap Jhaveri Right.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer So, there will be everything will happen in that. Because Basel III is actually seven, eight year I would say implementation period.
Kashyap Jhaveri Right.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer So, we will raise more capital, core Tier‐1 we will return more earnings, we will raise Basel III compliant Tier 2 capital and we will also raise Basel III compliant happy Tier I capital.
Kashyap Jhaveri So, do we have any capital raising plan in near future?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Well, it depends what near future is. There is no plan on the table right now.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer But, we have shareholder empowerment to raise equity capital when we believe the market conditions and valuations are appropriate.
Kashyap Jhaveri But to put it differently what's the minimum Tier I I mean that we in past we have raised when it even touched like about 9% or even so is there any threshold level upto which we probably below which we wouldn't want to go?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Kashyap Jhaveri Right.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer The computation of Tier 1 has been changing for the last several years from Basel I to Basel II to Basel III. So we ourselves are looking at three answers for the same number.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Which is there is a Basel I capital adequacy, there is a Basel II capital adequacy there is also now Basel III adequacy. So one of them yes will be high and one of them will be low. So is there a number in our mind not really that we are looking at as a hard
floor.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Nor are we looking at our Tier I ratios dropping off because our growth is well within our means at this point in time. So we are growing loans which are lower than the ROE that we are making or earning, which means that we are not consuming capital.
Kashyap Jhaveri Sorry I didn't get the last...
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Capital adequacy is capital divided by risk. If ROE is growth of capital. If ROE is 20 capital will grow every year at 20. So if loans also grow at 20, so you have 1.2, 1.2 canceling so your Tier‐1 ratio is the same. Which is what I was saying is that our growth of loans...
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay I got Within the ROE as of now. So we are now...
Kashyap Jhaveri So you are talking about RWA growth?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer RWA growth, correct. I don't want to use RWA because some of the RWA is disposable.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer We have plenty of bonds if we sell them
Kashyap Jhaveri Right.
Corporate Participant If we sell them capital will be released.
Kashyap Jhaveri Right.
Corporate Participant For example.
Kashyap Jhaveri Right
Corporate Participant And we can sell them. Okay.
Corporate Participant But that's not really necessarily the compulsion that we are dealing with.
Kashyap Jhaveri I get your point. And the question on earlier we spoke about this B2B and B2C selling off our CASA, sorry SA accounts. Now if I look at your SA balances as Mr. Rana Kapoor rightly mentioned earlier, they have round by about 3.5x over last one year.
Corporate Participant Yeah.
Kashyap Jhaveri If I look at your transaction banking business which would be more or less probably B2B has also grown quite distinctly over last couple of quarters. But if I look at CA balances which would be probably also part of that B2B selling...
Corporate Participant Yeah.
Kashyap Jhaveri That hasn't grown inline with all this businesses. So in terms of your B2B business, why would you take a SA balance from corporate or why would he give you a SA balance when he is not giving you a CA balance?
Corporate Participant No, he gives the CA balance. What we have to firstly CA has grown in line, so it is not grown like savings account which have grown out of line.
Kashyap Jhaveri Yeah, but we would have had more enrollments right, in terms of clients.
Corporate Participant The CA is also, if you look at the industry statistics. Right.
Corporate Participant We as a business model are already mature on CA, we have been doing CA for seven years to eight years.
Kashyap Jhaveri Right.
Corporate Participant Because that's all that we were doing, we were doing commercial banking. You get as a consequences CA. So you have to assume that our CA model and outcomes are more mature than SA. If you look at the industry outcomes, lots of PSU banks have 5%, 6%, 7% of their deposits in the form of CA.
Kashyap Jhaveri Which we have bought 10%.
Corporate Participant We have got about 10. Even good more mature stable old private sector banks have between 11 and 14, for example. So there is a little bit of let's say maturity in this business already.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay.
Corporate Participant Can't expect 10 to become 20.
Kashyap Jhaveri Right.
Corporate Participant Nor do we like some banks do disclose Escrow Account under CA, for example. Our CA is actually pure transactable, transacting accounts. It's not Escrow Account, we don't include dividend accounts, we don't include bank issue accounts. So none of that is included in this number. Okay.
Corporate Participant Which can be volatile otherwise.
Kashyap Jhaveri Right.
Corporate Participant So, this number is yet growing but it is relatively more mature.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay. And a question on your asset side, couple of bucket, couple of sectors have grown dramatically over last about two or three odd quarters like for example if you look at metal and metal products, you look at, sorry if you look at electricity, you look at chemicals Asian paints, they have grown something like 2x, 2.5x, 3x over last two, three quarters. So, is that the exposure has gone up in those or there is some declassification which has happened?
Corporate Participant What we are compared, I must mention in this quarter is that RBI has given a relatively modified disclosure requirements on sectoral exposures and industry exposures.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay.
Corporate Participant So, number one, these are being align to that.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay.
Corporate Participant So, there have been certain sectors which RBI has removed from the new classification.
Kashyap Jhaveri Corporate Participant But we have retained them in our disclosure. So, that we have at least some continuity.
Kashyap Jhaveri Right.
Corporate Participant Because we were seeing for example RBI removed NBFCs from the exposure list requirement that we have to give in our Basel II disclosure.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay.
Corporate Participant But we should have gone in other but we have removed it, kept it out so that we have some continuity from our past disclosures.
Kashyap Jhaveri Sir, my question is particularly to this couple of sectors like metals which used to be about 3.5% has suddenly gone up to 9 odd
percent?
Corporate Participant Right. Because we have added Hindalco,TATA Steel and TATA Power.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay. Sir, this is including credit substitutes?
Corporate Participant Yes, this book is, the denominator is loans plus credit substitutes, 100% is there.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay. But we are doing, there is no loan which has not been included in this pie.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay.
Corporate Participant It is not like only corporate or only retail or anything, this is 100% off the banks loan book and credit substitute book.
Kashyap Jhaveri Sure. Just one last question, total of this pie chart on deposit, it's not totally to 100, so what is missing in that?
Operator Excuse me, Mr. Jhaveri. Sorry to interrupt. After this question has been answer, will you...
Kashyap Jhaveri Sure, I will withdraw. No issues.
Operator Thank you.
Corporate Participant We'll have to check.
Kashyap Jhaveri Sure. Yeah.
Corporate Participant The other, the only error could be in the larger part, the corporate deposits.
Kashyap Jhaveri Okay. So the other we know are on intuitively the ‐‐ close to the correct numbers.
Kashyap Jhaveri Sure.
Corporate Participant If at all, if we have, if it's not totaling 100, the corporate deposit will be. It's not totaling? It might be some rounding up, but if at all the error is in the corporate book will be wider.
Kashyap Jhaveri Sure. I am done. Thank you.
Operator Thank you very much. [Operator Instructions]. Our next question is from Anand Laddha of HDFC Mutual Fund. Please go ahead.
Anand Laddha Hi, Rajat. If you can just explain, what proportion of your corporate loan book has a rating and what could be the bifurcation of that?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer 60% to 70% will be rated.
Anand Laddha Okay. And what could be the break up bifurcation in terms of how much are into BBB category, how much are below that, how much are into AA, single A?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Among the rated one?
Anand Laddha Yeah.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Anand Laddha Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer The ones that are rated, I think 1%, 2% will be below investment grade.
Anand Laddha Okay. Balance?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Balance will be investment grade.
Anand Laddha So BBB?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Yeah or maybe one, see investment grade is BBB or better. BBB minus or better is investment grade.
Anand Laddha Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer So there is BBB minus, BBB, BBB plus, A minus.
Anand Laddha Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer A or better is 80% plus.
Anand Laddha Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer And BBB minus not included, but worse is between 1% and 2%.
Anand Laddha Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer On the rated book, 100%.
Anand Laddha
Okay, I'm just confused, 80% is A or better.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer A or better.
Anand Laddha 1% or 2% are below investment grade.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Yeah. The rest is between BB plus and A minus, sorry, between BBB minus and A minus.
Anand Laddha Okay. And if my understanding is right, if I have to believe, the average yield on all those book will be around 13% because the average yield on a whole book is 12%, 13%?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer No, average yield on the whole book is 12.25. Average yield on the book is 12.25%.
Anand Laddha Okay, whereas average yield on the whole portfolio of the Bank including...
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer This is only loan book, 12.25% is only loan book.
Anand Laddha Only on the corporate loan book?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer No, total loan book.
Anand Laddha Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer 100% of the loan book. Corporate loan book will be slightly lower.
Anand Laddha Okay. So balance 40% because the corporate loan book is 60% of the balance sheet.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer
Yeah, I would say 11.5, 12.25, 13, should be let's say the large, mid and small yields.
Anand Laddha Okay, fine. And the 40% loan book which are SME and retail will be upward of what 13%?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Let's say the SME, which is classical SME in terms of where we are doing working capital, banking would be 12%, 13% in terms of yielding. Retail book actually is, will be a wider range because mortgages will happen lower, car loans will happen at 13%, 14%, some lending can happen even higher but that book is tiny. So our retail exposure will be 2% of our total book.
Anand Laddha Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Then we also have an element of acquired book particularly PSL. Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Those yields are lower.
Anand Laddha Okay. Fine, thanks.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Okay, Anand. Alright. Thank you.
Operator Thank you very much. Our next question is from Subramaniam PS of Sundaram Mutual Fund. Please go ahead.
Subramaniam PS Hi, good evening. My question was on the third party distribution fee, that's seen a good ramp up this quarter, wanted to know what kind of products are we now doing on third party distribution and what does the outlook on this line of revenue, any products that we still would be adding?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Yeah, we third, not if I can just say what we're distributing in general some of that could be third party, some of them could be, also be like gold. So it will be third party, but not necessarily like a mutual fund which is third party, so yes, so we're distributing insurance both life and non‐life, we're distributing mutual funds, we're distributing gold, we're also distributing some asset products of other manufacturers, which could be for instance housing loans we are planning to add not classically distribution but broking to this product suite.
Subramaniam PS
Okay. And what would be the mix of this third party between say life insurance commission on life and gold?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer It will be they will also be an element of transactional fees which comes from retail in this through cards and ATM usage.
Subramaniam PS Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Which is the more transactional type fees also. So the fee share that we are showing in under retail for others sometimes in some presentations, that is predominantly third party and transactional. The largest piece there will be insurance the second largest piece there will be the charges the card and card usage income that we get.
Subramaniam PS Okay. So life insurance followed by...
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Card usage, the third card there actually will be penalties.
Subramaniam PS Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Because we also have penal charges or customers sometimes don't maintain balances or have such other requirements.
Subramaniam PS So fair to assume that large part of this growth is because of this growth that you are seeing in savings and related card fee or...?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Predominantly, the growth is driven by franchise I would say improvements.
Subramaniam PS Okay the second question was on branch network expansion, by the year end what targets do we have in terms of branch roll out?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer I think this year will be I would say short of 500, may be 450, 475 should be the year end number.
Subramaniam PS Okay. So large part of the expansion is happening in the second half unlike what we have done in the past. Yeah, see this is also a little bit of function of how quickly the RBI moves on some of these things.
Subramaniam PS Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer So, it's a little bit of that timing risk that we are running into, YES plus we are okay also because we do feel that there is an element of need to also consolidate our last 18 months of growth. We have doubled our branches in last 18 months.
Subramaniam PS Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer March '11 our branch number was 150 and in September '12 it's 400.
Subramaniam PS True.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer So, may be it was 170, 180 or something. So, we have more than doubled the branches. So, I think there is also a little bit of let's say thinking that we are okay, we are consolidating, stabilizing the branches and making sure they are in good critical momentum before we ‐‐ there because productivity is also very important. Because if we don't take branches to a productive outcome, it will take very long for us to turn them around culturally speaking. So it's very important for us to make sure that we are seeing productivity before we are consuming more bandwidth of leaders in that business.
Subramaniam PS In terms of costs sir for these 475, 500 branches I mean we've seen sharp increase even in the overall OpEx, grown close to 50%. So have some of these costs already been incurred or are you seeing that the cost growth will be inline with what the branch expansion that we would see over the residual part of the year?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Growth should be less than inline, because newer branches are no longer that expensive or that headcount consuming. The older branches are more expensive because a lot of them are down town branches in metros and all of that. So we are not going to put another branch in Nariman Point in a hurry for example. Sir, why I am asking this question is the growth in OpEx has been higher than the growth in branches that we would have open. So, it is in that context that I was just trying to understand. This was the statement that you made even earlier that growth in OpEx might be at a slightly lower pace because lot of these branches are spoke branches but that doesn't seem to be paying out?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer It's the branches that have grown sir at cost have grown at less than 40%, branches have doubled in the last 18 months. So that is actually let's say 120% growth rate on branch numbers.
Subramaniam PS Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer So, the branches it's also has to be, we have to look at the incumbency of branches as cost. The cost will evolve also in branches to be fair. Day one rent will start, but we don't have to populate the branch to the maximum.
Subramaniam PS Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Because, there are no customers. So, there will be sales focus at the beginning in the branch costs, but the electricity meter rent meter and AC meter and maintenance meter are all running. But the people meter is more calibrated to business.
Subramaniam PS Okay.
Corporate Participant There will be increase of cost also when the people meter is being calibrated to increase business and branches. There will also be a shift from sales to service over the life cycle of branches because once you're matured in your geography, your burden is lot more service and deepening rather than adding new customers.
Subramaniam PS Okay. And sir, and one last question on your savings rate. Yes.
Subramaniam PS We've actually seen an increase in momentum of savings accretion this quarter. Just wanted to understand your views on how much would you attribute this to the differential between the rate that you offer and the rate on term deposits kind of narrowing which is increasing the attractiveness of this product and any thoughts because of this for you to keep this rates high even if interest rates come down or are you thinking of bringing down saving rates even when term deposit rates come down?
Corporate Participant For us, term deposit is a form of funding, saving account is also a form of funding. In fact savings account also comes with the cross‐sell opportunity, not as much as FD. Savings account is also a transactional account, as far as the customer is concerned. There is a lot more engaged an account versus an FD, FD is a one‐time deal and may or may not even roll over.
So for us even if FD is seven, savings account will still make sense, even if FD is 7%. And let's say even if we have to employ I mean that's still long long away. We are not even thinking about it because FD currently is 9, 9.5, in terms of the current pricing. Even if we have to, we don't have to lower pricing, we can lower the hurdles, raised the hurdles.
Subramaniam PS Okay.
Corporate Participant We can increased the let's say the barrier from Rs. 100,000 to may be Rs. 200,000 or something like that.
Subramaniam PS Sure sir. Thanks sir. That's it from my side. All the best. Thanks.
Corporate Participant Thanks a lot. Thank you.
Operator Thank you very much. Our next question is from Parag Jariwala of Macquarie. Please go ahead.
Parag Jariwala Yes sir. Just one clarification on the Deccan Chronicle, you said that you've recovered one‐third, you have provided one‐third and remaining is around 70 crores. So, I mean seeing your credit cost for two quarters where do you provided
Corporate Participant See, the numbers are actually, I mean there is obviously some give and some take in all the numbers, so one‐third, one‐third, one‐third was just let's say a quick estimate of what's happening. So, the costs have been taken about of the order of 50 crores have been taken in this quarter.
Parag Jariwala Yeah, but your net credit cost is like 30 crores.
Corporate Participant But we have recovered some past bad loans.
Parag Jariwala Okay. And sir, there is no provisions is that once you have already provided 50 crore as in credit cost, so this remaining 70 crore should reflect in gross NPA, right?
Corporate Participant It's not an NPA, it's a servicing loans performing. We have recovered interest and principal in Q2 from their receivables of the company.
Parag Jariwala Yes so...
Corporate Participant And we have monetized some of the collateral that we had from the company.
Parag Jariwala So this 50 crore is the, I mean you can say cautiously provided.
Corporate Participant Yes, at the moment this is just a contingency provisioning but related to a NIM. So, it will be more like of the nature of a general provisioning as opposed to a specific provisioning but it is specific in any effect.
Parag Jariwala Corporate Participant Yes. We still have more than the remaining uncovered exposure, we have collateral or immovable tangible.
Parag Jariwala Okay.
Corporate Participant Full charge.
Parag Jariwala Okay. Thanks a lot, sir. Thank you.
Corporate Participant Welcome.
Operator Thank you very much. Our next question is from Abhishek Kothari of Violet Arch Securities. Please go ahead.
Abhishek Kothari Sir, what would be our non‐funded exposure to Deccan Chronicle and total non‐funded balance sheet file?
Corporate Participant The non‐funded to Deccan Chronicle is zero.
Abhishek Kothari Okay.
Corporate Participant And the non‐funded, now depends on non‐funded is because if we include FX forward contracts derivatives interest rate swap, all of that the off balance sheet is an excess of 1,00,000 crores.
Abhishek Kothari Corporate Participant 60,000 crores approximately. 62,000 crores.
Abhishek Kothari
Okay. Thank you, sir.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Welcome.
Operator Thank you. Our next question is from Vikesh Gandhi of Bank of America. Please go ahead.
Vikesh Gandhi Hi, Rajat, congratulations. Just one question I have actually is, you have seen your CASA, SA, everything moving branches, but can you give some color on the number of retail customers that you have now versus some trend or historic trend of how is it being shaping up?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Yes, without trying to excite our competition, I will try and answer. So we are, we have about four times more customers we had same time last year.
Vikesh Gandhi Than last year?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Yes.
Vikesh Gandhi Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer We, our acquisition rate is about three to four times more than we were acquiring in savings accounts about same time last year. Okay. And secondly, couple of times, I am sorry pardon me but couple of times you tried to explain this, so am I reading this correctly you have provided 50 crores on Deccan in this quarter?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Yes.
Vikesh Gandhi And you have a net exposure left of 70 crores.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Less than that, because we still have some, technically we can say the DSRA.
Vikesh Gandhi
Sorry.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Debt Servicing Reserve Account, which is the current balance of the company lying with us.
Vikesh Gandhi Okay. And against this 70 crores, you said you have a collateral of 60 odd crores.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer We actually have a ‐‐ if you ask me, we have a net exposure of between 60 and 65.
Vikesh Gandhi Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer And we have as much collateral at comfortable valuations. So the problem is not as much as whether we have collateral, but the problem is can we recover.
Vikesh Gandhi Right, right, obviously. And there have been some successful recovery but the ‐‐ the easier collateral has been monetized, the harder collateral, relatively harder collateral is still to be monetized.
Vikesh Gandhi And within this whole thing you have also said that I think you recovered one‐third of it, right?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Yes.
Vikesh Gandhi Okay, great. Thanks a lot.
Operator Thank you very much. Due to time constraints we will take our last two questions from the participant. Our next question is from Prashant Shah of Vantage Securities. Please go ahead.
Analyst Yes. If you could just let us know, you've given the overall segmentation of your customer assets portfolio. Now in terms of large commercial and retail, what would be the breakup? And which segment drove the growth for this particular year, this particular quarter?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Segmental exposure is between large, mid and small. The small includes SMEs and retail, 7%, 18% and 15%.
Analyst Okay. Sorry that's 7% for small?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer 67 is large, 18 is mid and 15 is retail and SME.
Analyst And which particular, means out of these three books, which particular segment do this contributed to mainly to this 35% growth during the quarter? Largely the corporate banking.
Analyst Corporate. Okay fine. Okay, thank you very much sir.
Operator Thank you. Our last question is from Mr. Pranav Tendulkar of Canara Robeco Asset Management. Please go ahead.
Analyst Yeah my questions have been answered. Thanks a lot.
Operator Thank you. We will take our next question from Shweta Mane of Arihant Capital. Please go ahead.
Shweta Mane Yeah. Hi sir, sir sounding little repetitive, but just trying to understand the trend, actually the credit substitute have outpaced the growth of advances, not getting into extrapolating the numbers, but if you could comment if this trend would be sustainable or going ahead the picture would be the same?
Corporate Participant No, no it's actually a function of the cycle, it's a function of credit risk appetite, it's a function of issuers wanting to issue paper, it is very difficult for us to predict how things will go, but as we have seen in the past, the loan book becomes the dominant business driver in the up cycle and in the down cycle, the bond books have also become a meaningful participant in the financing scenarios. So as and how we approach the up cycle, you can assume that the loan book will begin to take over the dominant role all over again.
Shweta Mane Okay. Sir and one last question, what's your current status on PSL because you mentioned in last quarter that there was a run down in branch banking and commercial banking portfolio.
Corporate Participant PSL status is reckoned for, at the ‐‐ on the last reporting Friday of March, so have six months to deliver and we will do our best to make sure we comply with RBI requirements.
Shweta Mane Corporate Participant Yes thankfully RBI is helping. So they are also relaxing some of the guidelines that for example just few days ago they have also partially relaxed the guidelines, so it's an evolving situation, we don't know what RBI will do next in terms of perfect clarity. But as far as our view is that though difficult, we will do our best to achieve priority sector, compliance requirement by RBI even on this March.
If there is a trade‐off between excessive risk and non‐compliance, I think we will call for non‐compliance. We will not take excessive risk and exposed the business model or the depositors of the bank to just do mere compliance, it has to be done well, it has to be done with some risk balance.
Shweta Mane Okay. Sir, one last question. Again it might be sounding like a repetitive but the margins have been range bound now for past say more than a year between 2.8% to 2.9%. You also mentioned last time that it is partly due to the non‐CASA cashs pushed so, and you also targeted 3% to 3.5% going ahead. So how do you strategize for this?
Corporate Participant Margins are still increasing. So we have to keep responding to also to the rate environment and competition in this environment. As far as margins are concerned, ma'am, we should be adding anywhere close to 10 basis points some margin improvement even in the next two quarters. So to be adding into that range as soon as this March.
Shweta Mane Okay.
Corporate Participant That's the current estimate. I mean if RBI tightens liquidity does not relieve liquidity like was the situation same time last year. We might see margins not breaking out at all. But anticipated that RBI will total liquidity as much as it is last year. So, as per current estimates, it looks that we should have a margin uptick in Q3 as well as Q4.
Shweta Mane Okay.
Corporate Participant And then there is underlying CASA improvement which is anyway firing which should touch to 3.5 in three years time.
Shweta Mane Okay. Thank you sir. That's it from mine.
Corporate Participant You're welcome Ma'am.
Operator
Thank you very much. Our next question is from Nitin Kumar of Quant Capital. Please go ahead.
Nitin Kumar Yeah. Hi Rajat.
Corporate Participant Hi Nitin.
Nitin Kumar I just wanted to check like why are we raising so much of tier 2 bonds when there would be of limited use under Basel III as the focus would be more on common equity then. So why are we loading so much of long‐term high cost capital?
Corporate Participant Yes, good observation, but there is still a grand fathering element that old tier 2 is available for, in Basel III also. These will also raise a tier 1. That also extends the life of tier 2 further into time, even in the Basel III environment. Basel III does not, there will be common equity focus. So we are not saying that there is no common equity focus and that we will not plan for common equity, of course we will. But there is also a role of tier 2, which is also enabler of business. For example, growth exposures, group exposure limits are driven by tier 1 plus tier 2 capital.
Nitin Kumar Okay.
Corporate Participant So we want to do more business with Tata's.
Nitin Kumar Okay, okay.
Corporate Participant We want to keep that ability to do business with the larger conglomerates open and more. Got it, got it.
Corporate Participant Thoughts of this long‐term capital is too tiny in front of the opportunity that it brings to us.
Nitin Kumar Okay, okay.
Corporate Participant Plus it is not that expensive. So if you are raising today ten year money at 9.9 equalized, it is actually cheaper than a two year to three year deposit on a like‐for‐like.
Nitin Kumar Okay, okay. And secondly what does led to an improvement in our tier 1 capital ratio this quarter, have we included the profits?
Operator Excuse me, Mr. Nitin Kumar, after this question has been answered, maybe request you to return to the queue please.
Nitin Kumar Yeah sure.
Operator Thank you.
Corporate Participant Yes. We have, this is audited number. So September 30th is an audited balance sheet and P&L.
Nitin Kumar Okay. Sure. Okay. Thanks.
Corporate Participant Thanks Nitin. Thank you very much. Our next question is from Jyoti Kathriya of Systematics. Please go ahead. Ms. Kathriya, your line is being unmuted, please go ahead. There seems to be no response from this line. We'll take our next question from Udith Sikand of KBW. Please go ahead.
Udith Sikand All my questions have been answered. Thank you.
Operator Thank you. [Operator Instructions]. Our next question is from Alpesh Mehta of Motilal Oswal. Please go ahead.
Alpesh Mehta Hi. Good evening. Congrats on a good set of numbers. Out of the total financial market income of roughly 1.4 billion, how much of that would be profit on sells of investments?
Corporate Participant It is less, it should be 47 crores, so 470 million.
Alpesh Mehta 470 million
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Yeah, and profit on sale is minimal.
Alpesh Mehta I didn't get you sorry.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Minimal as in might be some 1 crore, 2 crore number here and there. It will be very ordinary number in that.
Alpesh Mehta Okay. For the quarter but for the first half you told your total amount is 140 crores. Out of that how much would be profit on sale of investments. 45 croes would be profit on sale of investments.
Alpesh Mehta and for the second quarter it could be minimal, almost zero?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Yes.
Alpesh Mehta Okay. Thank you very much.
Operator Thank you. Our next question is from Amit Ganatra of Religare Asset Management. Please go ahead.
Amit Ganatra Yeah what's the status on PSL priority sector right now in terms of what's the total exposure as a percentage of overall book?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Exposure will be typically priority sector is seasonal. So it drops of in the September quarter. And it begins to build up again as the agri season cycle is. So today the reconing is not important whether it is 20‐25 it will not matter because finally we have to be at 40% as at March the last reporting Friday of March.
Udith Sikand And based on your target will you reach 40% this year or there might be a short fall?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Well, we will do our best to reach. I think the plans are all there in terms of both from what segment, what kind of origination has to be done, in what part near about what kind of pricing I think execution is still to be tested like every year. This year is obviously going
to be harder than the past year because the definitions of prior sector have been realigned some new opportunities have opened up, but we don't know how scalable they are how much can we penetrate in those opportunities. So that is the execution risk we are dealing with and some parts have been withdrawn and some there is still ‐‐ RBI is still thinking about whether to relax or not relax some of the other parts of priority sector. So, it is very difficult to say with confidence that we will achieve but what we can say is that we will do our best to achieve.
Amit Ganatra Right. And the last question is that in your provisions and contingencies do you book any mark‐to‐market gains on investment portfolio or those are booked in other income?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Losses will be booked rather provisions will be booked there. The all realizations of loss and gain, realized gains and realized losses will be shown in the top line, income line. Provisions which means they are unrealized losses will be shown in the contingency line.
Amit Ganatra So, this quarter say for example 30 crore is provisions and contingency...
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Yes.
Amit Ganatra Does anything relate to investment book?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer There is a small reversal, yes. So we had provided in the earlier quarter that has been reversed in this quarter. So there is a minus entry.
Amit Ganatra How large is that small number or?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Single digit crore number.
Amit Ganatra Okay. Thank you.
Operator M B Mahesh Sir just can we have the breakup of provisions for the quarter?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Breakup of provisions?
M B Mahesh Yes.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Yes. Basically press provisions are about 50 crores.
M B Mahesh And the minus 20 crores.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer I'm sorry?
M B Mahesh You have 50 crores of provisions?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Yes. The other is recovery and our reversal of investment provisions.
M B Mahesh Which is said was about 2 crores, 3 crores?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Well. Some higher single digit number in provision on investments.
M B Mahesh Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer No, no the problem with this quarter disclosure of industrial or sectoral break up is that RBI has put out a new format.
M B Mahesh Okay, okay. Is that the same for metal and metal products sir.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer New format, yes.
M B Mahesh Okay. And the last question is on your PSL which you had mentioned earlier in this definition for the current ‐‐ in the current guidelines does it include the investment book too?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer HTM investment book, yes. The denominator you mean.
M B Mahesh In the denominator, yes.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer If you're holding non‐SLR investments in the held to maturity book it is included.
M B Mahesh No there is another ‐‐ there is a usage of this word called other investments eligible to be treated as priority sector.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Those are the RIDFs and NABARD and SIDBI and EXIM and NHB bonds.
M B Mahesh Okay, so AFS as of now corporate bonds is excluded in it. Yeah.
M B Mahesh So that's been clarified excluded in it.
Corporate Participant Yeah.
M B Mahesh So that's been clarified.
Corporate Participant There was never a clarification.
M B Mahesh Okay.
Corporate Participant It was always that.
M B Mahesh Okay. Sure. Thanks a lot.
Operator Thank you. Our next question is from Swati Madhabushe of UBS Securities. Please go ahead.
Swati your line has been un‐muted, please go ahead. There seems to be no response, we'll take our next question from Jyoti Kumar of Spark Capital. Please go ahead.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Hi Rajat, this is Ganesh from here. Two questions, one is want to understand your, the real cost of savings accounts including say the ATM, the capital cost of putting ATMs or maintenance cost, cash needing to be maintained there on a day‐to‐day basis, the fees you pay for other banks using, your customers using, what you pay for other banks largely. Just want to get the sense of the real cost of savings? Okay, so some specific answers to your questions, other bank customers use our ATMs more than our customers use other bank ATMs.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer So we are net acquirer. Means that we make money.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Got it.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Which is very simply said basically we have, I mean it's not a very great answer I am giving, but we have more ATM share in the market than we have customer share.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Got it.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer So therefore we ‐‐ see the problem in answering this question is that there is a very classical variable cost versus fixed cost argument that I'm going to bring in, because firstly it's a very difficult number to compute and secondly my submission is that it does not matter.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Because we should look at this business only on a variable cost basis, because the more you scale up your fixed costs are not going to grow, I will the same branches with more customers potentially, the same ATM can service far many more customers because there is plenty of whatever servicing time available at ATMs, so we are more or less worried about the variable cost of that business and variable of savings account business is very little.
Ganeshram Jayaraman But it could be how much, how many basis points, over and above the 7%?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Negligible, because the only variable cost that we have to incur is statement sending home, which is every quarter, the ‐‐ maybe semi variable cost which is the one‐time origination cost.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Okay.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer And the once in a while check book and once in a while new card, if that is not charged in that account format. There is no variable cost, it's very little.
Ganeshram Jayaraman And the cash that you need to maintaining in ATMs is that, that should typically have a reasonable cost?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer But that's, the cash is in the branches also.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Right.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer The cash is in the ATM, the cash can be in the branch as well that is the franchise cost, that is nothing to do with savings accountd, we couldn't, even a current account customer can withdraw from an ATM if he has a card. So it is very difficult to be able to attribute cost to savings account, we can do apportioning, but those will be full of assumptions. Even that you can assume is a fixed cost because we will always maintain some cash in that ATM.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Sure.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer If more customers use that, we still have to have once a day servicing.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Sure. Because it can not be that we do not service the ATM once a day.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Sure.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Irrespective of Rs.100 being withdrawn or Rs.5 lakh being withdrawn.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Got it.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer So the guy, our outsourced company employee will go to the ATM everyday to service it, pick up cheques, any deposits, because there are TATs agreed there. If there is a cheque deposit dropped in the ATM we have to clear it.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Sure.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer If we don't go one day, the TATs will fail.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Got it.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer So lot of that is predominantly fixed cost heavy. So idea, business strategy is very simple, maximize.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Sure. Got your point. Second question is, what will be the quantum of loans that you have down sold, say the first half or this quarter specifically or more first half in general? Down sold to PSU banks, specifically?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Well if I can combine syndication and down selling put together, I think may be 2,000 crores. Okay. And I am asking this because of the recent Ministry of Finance directive, asking PSU banks to have a policy or to be more selective in buying loans from other banks. So how could that affect you in some form in, your syndication income or your...
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Not buying, see the difference in syndication is that they are not buying, these are all, all banks are coming into the syndication on day one, we are only let's say the arranger and a participant. So it is not that, see sell down.
Ganeshram Jayaraman I was looking more, not really from a syndication perspective, more from a down selling perspective.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Down selling would be maybe let's say, firstly it need not be a profit opportunity because this is, money, fee incidence happens at syndication. It doesn't happen at sell down.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Right.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Sell‐down is more exposure management, it is more let's say risk management also because we don't want, if I have a group exposure constrained, I can sell some exposure in one company to a bank and I open up opportunity in other company. So it is a, I don't think it will stop. I think the ministry might also be worried because there are still brokers in this business.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Correct.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Whenever we are selling or syndicating, we participate in that. We don't wash our hands, we are always participates.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Right.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Ganeshram Jayaraman Out of the 2,000 crores that you mentioned how much will be down‐sold?
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Syndication would be majority, maybe 1,500, down‐selling will be 500.
Ganeshram Jayaraman Okay, okay. Thanks Rajat. Thanks. That's it from me.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Welcome.
Operator Thank you very much. Due to time constraints, that was our last question. I would now like to hand the floor back to Mr. Sumeet Kariwala of Morgan Stanley for closing comments.
Sumeet Kariwala Yeah. Hi. Thanks a lot, Rana, Rajat and the entire team for this very useful call. Thanks, and best of luck for the third quarter. Thanks.
Rajat Monga, Group President, Financial Markets and Chief Financial Officer Thank you, Sumeet, and thank you all for listening in. Thank you.
Operator Thank you very much, gentlemen of the management. On behalf of Morgan Stanley India Company Private Limited, that concludes
Recommended